26th April 2013 Student Number: 294287 Word Count: 9,716 Course Title: Independent Study Project in Social Anthropology 151802039 Supervisor: Caroline Osella French the Llama, I’m a Nerdfighter! Identity Formation and Collaboration in a YouTube Community Zoë Glatt BA Social Anthropology Dissertation 2013 This dissertation is submitted in partial fulfilment of the requirements for the degree of BA Social Anthropology of the School of Oriental and African Studies (University of London). I have provided a CD copy of my dissertation, so that the markers may click on links if they wish to watch the videos and look at the websites that I have referenced as they read it, though this is not necessary for understanding the argument. Contents Nerdfighteria.....................................................1 Abstract..................................................1 I. The beginning.............................................1 II. Where are the VlogBrothers now? ..........................3 Introduction......................................................6 I. Why YouTube, and why now?..................................6 II. Structure..................................................7 III. Methodological constraints.................................7 ONE Community...............................................9 I. The community concept......................................9 II. Shared practices and identity..............................11 III. Speech communities...............................................12 TWO Collaboration.........................................14 I. Not community, but collaboration..........................14 II. The Project for Awesome – a case study for collaboration and community creation....................................16 THREE Relationships in Nerdfighteria................20 I. Deep/loose connections....................................20 II. Fangirling and nerdiness..................................23 Conclusions.......................................................26 I. Authenticity..............................................26 II. The end...................................................27 Bibliography........................................................29 Video sources.............................................30 Appendix.1 Transcription of Nerdfighter gathering......................32 Appendix.2 Forum research........................................................50 Nerdfighteria Abstract This independent study project is an exploration of the YouTube community ‘Nerdfighteria’, as an excellent example of the social potential of YouTube more generally. I have split my research into three parts. In chapter one I analyse how concept of community works online, and specifically in Nerdfighteria. In chapter two I address the crucial role that collaboration plays in in the construction of community on YouTube. In chapter three I investigate the nature of interpersonal relationships in Nerdfighteria, with specific reference to the roles of ‘nerdiness’ and ‘fangirling’. I. The beginning The video starts with scrolling text set to sentimental music. It reads: ‘Two Brothers, One Video Blog. 365 Day of Textless Communication. It’s a whole new kind of Brotherhood. Brotherhood 2.0’. This is the Vlogbrothers’ first YouTube video, published on January 1st 2007, in which Hank Green lays out the project that he and his brother John Green are about to embark upon: “Hello John. By now you will have learnt that we will no longer be communicating through any textual means. No more instant messaging, no more emailing. Only video blogging. And possibly phone calls… Starting on January 1st, today, I will send you a video blog. Tomorrow you will reply to that video blog. We will continue like this until the year is up. If one of us fails to send a video blog on a weekday there will be certain punishments… Brotherhood 2.0 commences today.” (VlogBrothers 2007a) And this is exactly what they did. Each vlog (video blog)1 had to be less than four minutes. Hank and John asked each other questions, set each other tasks and talked about politics, literature and their personal lives, amongst other things. The filming quality was very low and John and Hank were noticeably awkward, though less so as the year went on. The project was also made available on their website called ‘Brotherhood 2.0’. In a video in February 2007, near the beginning of the project, John saw an arcade game that he thought was called ‘Nerd Fighters’ (it turned out to actually be called Aero Fighters) and vlogged the following: 1 The vlog is a common format for YouTube videos, involving a person/people giving a monologue directly to the camera. The vlog is a very flexible, simple and communicatively effective format, which in part explains its popularity. They can be scripted or unscripted, about any topic, and can use any number of props. Burgess and Green (2009a) describe the vlog as ‘an emblematic form of YouTube participation’ (p. 94). In their 2007 study of the statistical makeup of all YouTube videos, the vlog ‘dominated the sample’, making up nearly 40% of the ‘Most Discussed’ category. 1 “Here’s my question about Nerd Fighters. Is Nerd Fighters a game about people who fight against nerds, or is it a game about nerds who fight against other people? I’ve come to believe that Nerd Fighters is a game about nerds who fight, nerds who tackle the scourge of popular people. And I’ve been thinking to myself, this would be a great video game.” (VlogBrothers 2007b) Soon after, their subscribers independently adopted the label ‘Nerdfighters’. The concept of the name is fundamental to the shared identity of Nerdfighteria; it is the reappropriation of a long- standing stereotype of the American ‘high school nerd’ who likes comic books, does well academically and gets bullied by the jocks. Hank and John take pride in their ability to overcome stupidity and brutishness with their quick wittedness, intelligence and nonviolence2. They demonstrate their left-wing political stance in a number of videos and emphasise the importance of education (both formal and informal) as one of their central messages. As 2007 came to a close, John and Hank announced that they were to continue vlogging and launched a new website, which their followers call the ‘Ning’, that featured a forum where Nerdfighters could communicate with one another3. Originally the website was moderated solely by Hank, but is now maintained by a group of volunteers known as the ‘Ningmasters’. It was at this point that the community took on a life of its own, with Nerdfighters uploading videos, having discussion threads and creating projects and groups independently of John and Hank. As one of my interviewees at the gathering I organised commented: L: I don’t think you have to watch specifically Hank and John’s videos to be a Nerdfighter. I don’t know. Because actually the definition of a Nerdfighter at the beginning was that you watched Hank and John’s videos and that’s the community. But I think it’s more than that now, not just their videos. I think it’s more the community and also the other YouTubers you can watch. (Appendix.1.2) It is interesting to see that Nerdfighteria has surpassed Hank and John. This is something that John himself recently commented on: “I like the idea of Nerdfighteria being about more than us, and I like to imagine a world where people identify as Nerdfighters, who embrace the values of Nerdfighteria, without even necessarily knowing who I am. That sounds great to me.” (Cook 2013b) 2 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tuvCb5eBbjE In the video about the game ‘Nerd Fighters’ John goes on to explain how the ‘nerd team’ (which includes William Shakespeare, Isaac Newton, Albert Einstein and Nelson Mandela) would easily beat the ‘popular team’ (which consists of George W. Bush and Tom Brady). 3 http://nerdfighters.ning.com/ 2 Despite John’s claim that he wants the values of Nerdfighteria, as opposed to himself as a personality, to be the driving force of the community, he and Hank continue to be an important hub around which Nerdfighters rally. II. Where are the VlogBrothers now? Despite their original plan for Brotherhood 2.0 to last one year, fast forward six years and four months and the VlogBrothers are still going strong. Now they only publish videos on Mondays and Fridays on their main channel4, as opposed to every weekday. However, they have since created an unusually large number of spin-off YouTube channels, including two very popular educational channels5, a Pride and Prejudice modern day adaptation6 and a game walkthrough channel7. Aside from the Ning, they also have a separate website for their record label DFTBA on which they sell merchandise (CD’s, posters, t-shirts) and promote the bands on the label8. DFTBA is an initialism for “Don’t Forget to be Awesome”, their famous catchphrase and video signoff. John (Fig. 1) is now 35 years old and Hank (Fig. 2) is 32. John is also an award-winning young adult fiction writer, whose most recent book The Fault in Our Stars (2012) sat at the number one spot in the New York Times bestseller list for seven consecutive weeks after it was published. It is based loosely on a Nerdfighter called Esther Earl who died at the age of 16 in 2010 of thyroid cancer. A large part of John’s success as a writer is due to the huge support he gets from Nerdfighters, most of whom read his books avidly. The VlogBrothers’ popularity has grown exponentially since their inception. For their first one hundred videos they had fewer than two hundred subscribers
Details
-
File Typepdf
-
Upload Time-
-
Content LanguagesEnglish
-
Upload UserAnonymous/Not logged-in
-
File Pages55 Page
-
File Size-